Century-of-Information Strategy JCSR, JISC London Malcolm Atkinson Director e-Science Institute UK...

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Transcript of Century-of-Information Strategy JCSR, JISC London Malcolm Atkinson Director e-Science Institute UK...

Century-of-Information

Strategy

JCSR, JISC London

Malcolm AtkinsonDirector e-Science Institute

UK e-Science Envoy

www.nesc.ac.uk13th February 2008

Outline

• Why we need a CIR Strategy• What will it do• Why do it now

Official UK Research Goals

Table from Anna Kenway

The 21st Century

This is the century of information

PM G. Brown, University of Westminster, 25 October 2007

• We can collect it• We can generate it• Can we move it?• We can store it• Can we use it? • Dramatic increase in data from sensors

• Dramatic drop in cost of computation• Web-scale effects• Ubiquitous digital communications• Community intelligence• Global challenges• Transforming research, design, diagnosis, social behaviour, …

セキュリティ

GRID/ ペタコン

ユビキタス

ITS

ではない 情報系アンブレラ

The Information Explosion 988EB

(2010)

161EB(2006 by IDC)

= 1ZB

Slide: Satoshi Matsuoka

Outline

• Why we need a CIR Strategy

•What will it do• Why do it now

High-Level Goals for CIR

• New world-leading research in all disciplines• New methods & new technology

• High impact (transformative)• Sustained rapid transfer from invention to wide use• Much wider engagement => More Research & Innovation• Capacity & Skills building• Innovative advances in Education• Effective transfer between business & academia

• Cost effective• Shared e-Infrastructure• Shared support for developing advances in

Tools Services Trust

• Skills mobility & interdisciplinary R&D facilitation

Elements of CIR

• Establish an Office of Strategic Coordination of Century-of-Information Research (OSCCIR)

• Support the continuous innovation of research methods

• Provide easily used, pervasive and sustained e-Infrastructure for all research

• Enlarge the productive research community who exploit the new methods fluently

• Generate capacity, propagate knowledge and develop a culture via new curricula

OSCCIR Goals

• Quinquenial planning cycle• Balance cost-effective e-

Infrastructure with enabling best research

• Encourage development of skills in information & computationally intensive research

• Ensure that achievement in interdisciplinary & information intensive research is well valued

• Enable diversity, agility and creativity on increasingly powerful e-Infrastructure

• Harmonise provision and increase interoperability

• Monitor provision and ensure cost effective

• Conduct strategic reviews to assess UK CIR in the global context

• Improve quality and sustainability of services and tools

• Improve pathways for exploitation

• Promote public understanding of CIR

• Consult on ethics

Enable Rapid Innovation

• Sustain support for interdisciplinary teams• Breakthroughs depend on talented research leaders• Plus strong supporting teams• Plus fundamental advances in all disciplines and

technology

• Provide an environment of composable components• Significant advances from familiar components• Composed in new ways

• Provide powerful tools and services• With licence to experiment

• Inject energy through challenges & long-term funds

Enlarging the community

• Multiple levels of attainment and curricula• Shared training material• Joint action with professional bodies• Opportunities for developing skills• Recognition of skills• Communication about opportunities & benefits• Work with industry• Flagship examples & media outreach• Messages through media, museums and

schools

Education for CIR

• Research council Doctoral training accounts

• HE FCs and RCs develop incentives• Organise flow from grant-funded

research to education• Workshops on educational goals and

the means of achieving them• Eventually deliver input into schools

curricula

Outline

• Why we need a CIR Strategy• What will it do

•Why do it now

Changing Context for Research• Growing proportion is collaborative effort• International challenges, facilities & collaboration /

competition• Digital-systems revolution

• Automation, sensors, instruments, computers, data & networks• Pervasive use of digital devices and data• Data deluge

• Shared remote experimental facilities• Real-time control and analysis

• Ambient computational and content services• Community expectations, collaborations & intelligence• Public engagement in ethics, green energy, decisions & policy

• In all professions information systems, data analysis and computational modelling will become prevalent

Dangers from Inaction

• Loss of competitive position• Less agile innovation• Fewer collaborating communities• Less interdisciplinary and community effects

• Poor return on investment• Sharing lost, effort duplicated• Community fragmentation, aggregation harder• Loss of skill mobility

• Lack of expansion of the active community• Loss of international influence &

opportunities

Questions

Photographer: Kathy Humphry

OSCCIR Stakeholders

• General public• Researchers• Educators• Institutions

• Universities, Research Centres• Commercial Information Systems R&D

• Users• Business, government, education, healthcare &

organisations

• Funders• DIUS, research councils, funding councils, research-

funding charities & TSB